QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 8 June 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 8 June 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US tech led the selloff, Europe held up better, while Asia saw heavy pressure in chip-heavy markets.
  • Volatility: VIX +39.7%, CPI/PPI ahead, Middle East tensions, downside skew
  • Digital Assets: Bitcoin rebounds, ETF outflows, defensive positioning
  • Fixed Income: US treasury yields rose to highest level in more than a year at front-end of yield curve on strong US jobs report
  • Currencies: USD surged Friday to highest levels since early April on strong US jobs report
  • Commodities: Gold breaks key support on inflation and rate fears; oil underpinned by renewed Middle East tensions
  • Macro events: Germany Apr. Factory Orders

Macro headlines

  • Israel struck several military targets in Iran, retaliating after Iran launched missile barrages toward Israel, warning against action in Lebanon and straining a fragile ceasefire. Israel said all were intercepted with no casualties. Donald Trump reportedly criticized Israel’s Beirut strikes, urged Netanyahu not to retaliate, and pressed Iran to resume talks. The exchange is one of the most serious tests of a ceasefire that took effect on April 8 to halt fighting involving the US, Israel and Iran
  • South Korean stocks, the posterchild of AI concentration risk tumbled more than 8%, extending a three-day decline to 13.5%, as investors pulled back from AI bets that have fuelled the global bull market in equities. The benchmark later narrowed its drop as memory makers Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc. rebounded from session lows
  • Japan's real GDP expanded at an annualized pace of 1.8% in the first quarter, down from an initial reading of 2.1%. The rate which beat forecasts still points to a largely resilient economy supported by solid consumer spending and trade, with demand for artificial intelligence-related products providing a key boost for exports.
  • The US added 172K jobs in May 2026, beating 85K forecasts and following a revised 179K gain. Leisure and hospitality, local government, health care, and manufacturing added jobs, while financial activities lost 22K. Revisions raised March–April employment by 93K, underscoring labor market resilience.
  • The US unemployment rate stayed at 4.3% in May 2026, as expected. Unemployment fell by 66K, employment rose by 149K, labor force participation held at 61.8%, the employment rate edged up to 59.2%, and the U-6 rate dipped to 8.1%.
  • Andy Burnham plans to challenge Keir Starmer for UK prime minister, contingent on winning the June 18 Makerfield by-election to enter Parliament. Starmer says he will not step down. Markets expect nearly two BoE rate hikes this year, starting in September.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0600 – Germany April Factory Orders
1500 – NY Fed 1-year Inflation Expectations
0030 – Australia Jun. Westpac Consumer Confidence
0130 – Australia May NAB Business Confidence Survey

Earnings events

  • Wednesday: Oracle
  • Thursday: Adobe, Dollarama

For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.


Equities

  • USA: The Nasdaq Composite fell 4.2%, the S&P 500 lost 2.6%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 1.4% as investors cut exposure to AI-linked technology after Broadcom’s results failed to meet very high expectations. Nvidia fell 6.2%, Broadcom dropped 7.9% as its AI outlook did not clear the market’s elevated bar, while CrowdStrike fell 6.7% as investors focused on higher costs despite solid demand. The session showed how little room for error remains in richly valued growth stocks. Markets now turn to inflation data and bond yields for the next test.
  • Europe: The Stoxx 600 fell 0.3%, the DAX lost 0.8%, the CAC 40 declined 0.3%, while the FTSE 100 was broadly flat as Europe followed the US lower, but with less stress. Technology and semiconductor-linked names weakened after the sharp US AI selloff, while more defensive and commodity-linked parts of the market helped limit losses. The session showed that Europe was not immune to the AI valuation reset, but it was less exposed than the US Nasdaq. Investors now watch whether higher bond yields and tech weakness remain contained.
  • Asia: Asian equities fell sharply in Monday trading as Friday’s US technology selloff spread into chip-heavy markets. South Korea’s KOSPI dropped more than 4.5% after falling as much as 8.8% earlier, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down about 3.8% at the morning close. Taiwan also came under heavy pressure as investors sold semiconductor names, while Hong Kong and mainland China fell more moderately. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix led the regional decline as investors reassessed AI valuations. The key question is whether this remains a valuation reset or becomes a broader risk-off move.

Volatility

  • Volatility surged on Friday as investors reassessed the outlook for interest rates, technology valuations, and geopolitical risk. The S&P 500 fell 2.64%, the Nasdaq dropped 4.77%, and the VIX jumped 39.7% to 21.51, while VIX1D and VIX9D climbed to 28.70 and 23.92 respectively, highlighting elevated uncertainty ahead of this week's US CPI and PPI reports. Renewed Middle East tensions pushed Brent crude above $97 per barrel, adding fresh inflation concerns just as stronger-than-expected US jobs data reinforced expectations that rates could stay higher for longer. The key question for Monday is whether Friday's selloff was a healthy correction or the start of a deeper pullback, with markets likely taking their next cue from inflation data and geopolitical headlines.
  • SPX options currently imply an expected move of approximately 79 points (1.08%) for today's session and around 151 points (2.05%) for the full trading week.
  • Today's skew indicator: Downside skew remains firmly in place. Near-the-money puts around the 7,380-7,400 area are pricing implied volatility near 43%, compared with roughly 23% on comparable calls, suggesting investors continue to favour downside protection over aggressive dip-buying.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets are attempting to stabilise after one of their worst weeks since 2022, with Bitcoin recovering above $62,000 and Ethereum rebounding toward $1,650 after Friday's sharp selloff. The decline was driven by rising Treasury yields, ETF outflows, and stronger-than-expected US economic data that reduced expectations for lower interest rates, while reports that Strategy sold a small amount of Bitcoin added to investor caution.
  • Crypto-linked equities remained under pressure, with IBIT falling 5.2%, ETHA dropping 11.3%, COIN losing 7.2%, and MSTR declining 6.9%, highlighting continued risk aversion across the sector. Options activity also remained defensive, with institutional investors favouring protective positions in crypto ETFs and COIN ahead of this week's inflation data and next week's Federal Reserve meeting.

Fixed Income

  • US Treasury yields rose further after Friday’s US-jobs report driven surge, this time on the latest jump in crude oil prices after hostilities in the Iran war theatre picked up again at the weekend. After rising ten basis points Friday to a new cycle high just above 4.14%, the benchmark 2-year treasury yield rose over three basis points in early trading Monday, taking it north of 4.18% for another new cycle high since early 2025. The yield curve is bear-flattening, however, as the benchmark 10-year treasury yield only rose six basis points Friday to close the week at 4.53% and rose over three basis points to north of 4.56%, still well below the cycle peak of 4.685% of over two weeks ago.
  • US high-yield credit spreads were quite calm on a day that saw the worst stock-market sell-off in months, with the Bloomberg measure we track of US high yield bond spreads to US treasuries only up three basis points to 265 basis points, still at the lowest end of the historic range.
  • Japan’s government bond yield curve steepened as the rise in US treasury yields and crude oil prices saw longer yields rise, while the front end of the curve was well anchored. The benchmark 10-year JGB yield rose nearly four basis points Monday to trade above 2.71%.

Commodities

  • Gold, silver, and other hard assets extended Friday's selloff as renewed Israeli strikes on Iran pushed oil prices higher, reigniting inflation concerns. On Friday, an already weakened precious metals market tumbled after a stronger-than-expected US jobs report reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve may need to hike rates in 2026. Meanwhile, less rate-sensitive demand remains supportive, with the People's Bank of China reporting its largest monthly gold purchase since 2024.
  • Gold has been trending lower since mid-April amid an energy-driven inflation scare. Following Friday's jobs report and a broader deterioration in risk sentiment that also weighed on equities, bullion closed below its 200-day moving average for the first time since October 2023. For now, a combination of resilient economic growth and rising inflation expectations has created a challenging environment for gold, overshadowing the longer-term supportive themes of central bank buying, fiscal concerns, and reserve diversification.
  • Oil has once again moved towards the upper end of its established trading range after Israel and Iran resumed exchanging fire. Despite repeated optimism from the US administration, a lasting peace agreement appears increasingly elusive. The near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to tighten global energy markets, with several oil majors warning that the window before physical shortages begin to emerge may be measured in weeks rather than months.
  • Copper, which has attracted significant speculative buying in recent weeks, also came under pressure but has so far managed to hold above key technical support around USD 6.15 per pound. Europe's natural gas benchmark has climbed back above EUR 51/MWh (USD 17/MMBtu) as the risk of a prolonged conflict threatens global LNG flows at a time when Europe should be rebuilding inventories ahead of winter.
  • In agriculture, Chicago corn and soybean futures fell to fresh multi-month lows on Friday. Prices were pressured by a stronger dollar, weakness across broader financial markets, and generally favourable US growing conditions that continue to support expectations for strong harvests and ample supplies later this year.

Currencies

  • The US dollar jumped to new local highs across the board against the major currencies Friday as the US May jobs report saw a big surge in US treasury yields at the front-end of the yield. EURUSD posted its lowest daily close since early April at 1.1522 and fell as low as 1.1508 Monday before rebounding toward 1.1530. The Dollar Index more broadly rose to 100.00 for the first time since early April. The high for that index was 100.64 at the end of March, which in turn is the highest level since May of 2025.
  • USDJPY rose less than other major USD pairs as the market remains wary that Japan’s Ministry of Finance may put its significant resources to work in preventing further JPY weakening above 160.00 in USDJPY, where it first intervened in significant size back in late April. Still, traders were willing to bid up the pair for a close of 160.29 on Friday, near where it also traded early Monday.

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